1. Privacy-Preserving Record Linkage to Identify Fragmented Electronic Medical Records in the All of Us Research Program
- Author
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Howard S. Gordon, Shaun J. Grannis, Jingzhi Yu, Umberto Tachinardi, Margaret B. Madden, Raj C. Shah, Vesna Mitrovic, Charon Gladfelter, Molly Scannell Bryan, Bradley K. Taylor, Abel N. Kho, and Eneida A. Mendonca
- Subjects
030203 arthritis & rheumatology ,Research program ,business.industry ,Medical record ,Sample (statistics) ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Proxy (climate) ,Privacy preserving ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Data quality ,Medicine ,Honest Broker ,business ,Record linkage ,Demography - Abstract
As part of a national study in the United States to recruit one million Americans (All of Us Research Program) and their Electronic Health Record data, we set out to determine the degree to which care is fragmented across a sample of participating health provider organizations (HPOs). We distributed a previously validated Privacy-Preserving Record Linkage (PPRL) tool to participating sites to generate a unique set of keyed encrypted hashes for seven participating institutions across three States in the Upper Midwest of the U.S. An honest broker received the resulting encrypted hashes to identify patients with the same encrypted hashes shared across any combination of more than one institution as a proxy for patients receiving care across institutions. Out of 5,831,238 individuals, we identified 458,680 patients with data at more than one institution. Care fragmentation varied significantly by State and by Institution ranging from 6.1% up to 32.7%. Patients with fragmented care were more likely to be black (11.8% vs 10.8%), and slightly older (Median birth year 1968 vs 1969) compared with patients receiving care at only one participating institution. In contrast, patients who maintained an address in a warmer state (“snowbirds”) were the least likely to be black (7.5%) of all study groups. We identified conflicting or inconsistent demographic information in 49.1% of patients with care fragmentation compared with 5.6% of patients without care fragmentation. Privacy-preserving record linkage can be an effective means to identify populations with care fragmentation and poor data quality for focused clinical and data improvement efforts.
- Published
- 2020